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When is an alert not an alert?

The Riddler is one of Batman’s enduring enemies who takes delight in incorporating riddles and puzzles into his criminal plots—often leaving them as clues for the authorities and Batman to solve.

Question: When is a door, not a door?
Answer: When it’s ajar.

So riddle me this, Batman: When is an alert not an alert?

EventTracker users know that one of its primary functions is to apply built-in knowledge to reduce the flood of all security/log data to a much smaller stream of alerts. However, in most cases, without applying local context, this is still too noisy, so a risk score is computed which factors in the asset value and CVSS score of the source.

This allows us to separate “alerts” into different priority levels. The broad categories are:

Actionable Alerts: these require that you pay immediate attention because it’s likely to affect the network or critical data. An analogy is that you have had a successful break-in and the intruder is inside the premises.

Awareness Alerts: there may not be anything to do, but administrators should become aware and perhaps plan to shore up defenses. The analogy is that bad guys have been lurking on your street and making observations about when you enter/exit the premises and when its unoccupied.

Compliance Alerts: these may affect your compliance posture and so bear either awareness or action on your part.

And so, there are alerts and there are alerts. Over-reacting to awareness or compliance alerts will drain your energy and eventually sap your enthusiasm, not to mention cost you in real terms. Under-reacting to actionable alerts will also hurt you by inaction.

Can your SIEM differentiate between actionable and awareness alerts?
EventTracker can.
Find out more here.

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